Skip to content

The History of Digital Underwater Photography

Featured Replies

As most know, the Wetpixel website is in stasis and may be turned off at any point. Eric Cheng, who ran Wetpixel through its glory years, recently downloaded the entire site and being a software whizz, set about creating an extensive Wetpixel Wiki to chart the history of Wetpixel and the first 20 years of digital underwater photography.

You can dive into it here:

https://wetpixel.echeng.com

For me this was a unique and special period in underwater photography. As we can all easily appreciate, digital cameras transformed our activity in almost every way. And serendipitously, and just as importantly, this took place in the first decade of people truly being online (and before they were distracted by social media). This meant it was the first time underwater photographers from all around the world could chat and share information together in one place. However niche your interest, you could find the others who shared it. And it was exciting to finally be able to chat to so many other shooters (something we already all take for granted).

Digital cameras also brought a load of new people into the hobby, and a load of new talent too. And with lots of problems to overcome in those early years (and finally an objective assessment of techniques, made possible with instantly reviewable images) the site attracted almost everyone who was interested from brand new hobbies to almost all the leading professionals. As one member commented at the time, it was like finding a golf forum where Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods would be amongst those answering your questions! It was tremendously exciting time of rapid progress in gear, technique and imagery. As I said, special days.

Anyway, Eric got AI to read 8,000 articles, 400,000 forum posts, 5,700 comments, 1,500 news items posted between 2000–2023 and watch all 302 episodes of Wetpixel Live - and then to use all this information to construct the Wiki: the history of the film to digital transition and then the different waves of digital technology arriving, and to identify some of the movers and shakers of that period, and the story of Wetpixel itself (you'll see that Waterpixels.net is promoted in the history as a successor). It is interesting to see what an emotionless AI pulls out as the key events, as opoosed to what I would as an emotional human!

The Wiki is extensive and a great resource. If it is well received, I am sure that there is more that could be done with such technology and the Wetpixel archive. It is also possible to comment and suggest improvements.

Alex

This is a fantastic resource. Kudos to Eric Cheng for building it!

I’ve just started exploring. One thing I don’t yet understand is how to find the articles that are referenced. The links jump to the footnote, then the footnote jumps back to the link not the article. Any tips appreciated.

A serious blast from the past! An actual table of contents for an internet thing!!! Nota bene, a table of contents is something one typically found near the beginning of books.

Claude, however, is far from perfect. See the Seacam entries at https://wetpixel.echeng.com/companies/seacam/. "Both (viewfinders) were available for all Seacam housings..." The Seacam Silver housing for the NIkon F5 was offered in versions that did not take the interchangeable finders but instead had a flat window for use with an F5 with an Action-finder attached (DA-something, I know because I have one). As well, the remote system started a few years earlier before it was shown at DEMA (2007 as reported in the Wiki) because I was able to order my D2X housing (late 2004 or early 2005) with it installed (ordered retroactively during the 9-month wait it took). I seem to recall the remote was announced alongside the Seacam housing for one of the Canon 1D cameras (either 2 or 3 series). When I saw that on Wetpixel I called Liz at SeacamUSA and asked about adding it to my housing as well as the big question for me: Would it be able to be used with longer cables than the lousy 1.5 meters of the RS remote control (which I had at the time). The answer was yes and has been at the core of my digital UWP.

Edited by Tom Kline

  • Author

@Tom Kline - there is a correct text button on the bottom right side of the page, where you can report mistakes etc. Corrections are really important in making it valuable - so do report anything you see. I've not had a good read yet.

I am hopeful that Eric will also expand it over time too. But I know it was a lot of work for him to get it this far.

Important Information

Terms of Use Privacy Policy Guidelines We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.